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  1. Bunraku. plum blossoms–– the sound of a three-penny flute –Issa. Bunraku (pronounced boon-rakoo) is a form of traditional Japanese puppet theatre characterized by almost life-sized puppets accompanied by narrative chanting and shamisen music (a shamisen is a traditional Japanese string instrument). While puppet theatre is often seen as entertainment for children, the Japanese people ...

  2. 1 de jun. de 2021 · Bunraku (文楽) is a classical form of Japanese puppet theater using rhythmic chanting, and traditional music. Luckily, you don’t need to understand Japanese to experience it; bunraku relies heavily on visuals and sounds to tell stories, so it can be enjoyed by speakers of any language. Let’s take a look at the history and elements of this ...

  3. The strict use of the term is reserved for the Bunraku-za troupe – the only company that specializes in the art. This Japanese genre consists of three elements: text chanted by the tayū or narrator, the music played by the three-string shamisen, and the large puppets that execute the action of the characters, manipulated by visible animators.

  4. El teatro de marionetas Ningyo Johruri Bunraku. Inscrito en 2008 ( 3.COM) en la Lista Representativa del Patrimonio Cultural Inmaterial de la Humanidad (proclamado originalmente en 2003) Considerado en Japón, al igual que el Nô y el Kabuki, como uno de los principales géneros dramáticos tradicionales, el teatro de marionetas Ningyo Johruri ...

  5. País. Estrictamente hablando, se trata del ningyô-jôruri, es decir, una obra interpretada por títeres ( ningyô) en el estilo jôruri, pero desde principios del siglo XX, el término bunraku se fue imponiendo poco a poco hasta el punto de ser hoy en día, en Japón y en el mundo, su designación habitual. Este nombre toma como base el de ...

  6. Lo peor: no haber llegado más lejos en la abstracción formal y narrativa. La diferencia entre 'Pistol Opera', de Seijun Suzuki, y esta saltarina, carnavalesca e intrascendente 'Bunraku', suerte ...

  7. 9 de sept. de 2021 · Ranking with Nô and Kabuki as one of Japan’s foremost stage arts, the Ningyo Johruri Bunraku puppet theatre is a blend of sung narrative, instrumental accompaniment and puppet drama. This theatrical form emerged during the early Edo period (ca. 1600) when puppetry was coupled with Johruri, a popular fifteenth-century narrative genre. The plots related in this new form of puppet theatre ...

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